I " ------- - . - . J" ' " " " . - - .. C v-V -- ;"- .. ' .":- : --.7 . -. ? - - ' . ,-i " ii i i 11 I, - " .. - - - ' -i ' - - - - . . - "" ' r 'i " . w ; ' i 1 1 ' ' ' " " YOLUME XYI. HO' FOR WESTERN North Carolina 1 O- lie Garden Spot of the World. Varvetj o Products IT Surpasses all other Sec tions. Owing to its wonaerful nataral resources it was possible to esLablish bere the mo6t extensive Herbaria m on the Globe, and with it side by side has grown up the Latest Wholesale EstaWislmient If NORTH CAROLINA. . fetraLgers winder at its magni tude aLd are it a loss to understand bow it has been accomplished; the explanation is eas : Fair Dealing, Economi cal Management, ATi'Trimnm Profits AND A LARGE VOLUME OF BUSINESS. Has been our aim and policy and has contributed chiefly, we beliere, to the success we have thus far at tained. V t-f 1 - It has hecome a well known fact and is said to the credit nf our ieo- ple that mere h an. li so . ol nery, do scription is sold cheaper in Western North Carolina than anywhere in the South. 'New Yorkers frequent ly say to us: "Why you folki sell goods cheaper than we do here;' ThiB we are pleased to admit and it is not a revelation to many of our t beet merchants. Experienced bus iness men are alive to the fact that the Retail Merchant can buy to bet ter advantage in Baltimore than in New York, in Richmond than in Baltimore and in Statesville better till than in Richmond. Making Large Purchases We are enabled to secure the low est quantity price, while our Expenses are Insignificant As compared with houses in the large cities. Our object, however, in this ad vertisement was more par ticularly tQcallatten turn to a New aiil EanisoMline ofGoois, BOUGHT Esueciallj for tte Dried Frnit Seasoiu vur Counters are Loaded witn o sonable goods and there are Bargains in Every Department. Stock is eomtslete and there' will c no delay in making shipments. Very Respectfully, . ! . " - , , - 1 Bill Itt. Darbam Ulobe. TJie right which all men enjoy to chapge their breath at frequent in tervals; to change their 'politics and religion, is not to be questioned. It is a maa's own business what he ,loea so long as he harms neither socioty, himself nor the world." But wOTu men iwe .roik, Simpson, Col: onel-Mrs. Leap and other blatant, howling blatherskites go about the country sweating blood for th of the common people as they ex- Picoo n is ume lor sober thoughtful people to-think a min ute. Tha farmers of North are deluded. They read and think. uiuT i vacm-oni me professional politicions who talk red fire; who trll of the great wrongs and who howl until their lungs are sore and follow the howl with a collection, why, such fellows should not be al lowed to wreck the principles of government and sow the seeds of discontent. It happens in this State that have good crops; we have all things in the earth and under the earth in which the Good Maker conceived in the grand bewilderment of hia creation and yet here is Polk howl ing still about the wrongs. Ane JNortn Uarolma farmer must ponder well before he demands a law that singles him out and makes him a favored borrower of the gov ernment. Tho sub-Treasury bill seething with its foul blotches of jobbery and corruption says : "lama farmer and must have some money from the government at 2 per cent. I will giro my crop ub security. Can I get it ?" I he government asks ; Are you a farmer ?" The hornv- handed and .hornv tpngued agitor replies : "I am." "lnen, says the government, "cart our truck down to my ware house and I will make you a special favorite, I will loan you all the money you want and will charge yon less than the great commercial enterprises and great nnancers will pay for its use. Certainly you are a farmer and farmer Polk, who never farmed said you should be favored, you should be allowed special privi leges which others of us cannot enjoy but bring down your truck and we will tell the oilier fellows to be damned." The government is tha people. No more a farmer than a taylor, a printer, a corpenter, a stone mason simply the people and we are all the people. Pretty soon a merchant comes along. lie foolishly overstocked himself, tie has thousands of dol lars lying on his shelves. He wants to operate, get a new stocs, and he goes to the goyernment and says . "I see you nave warenouses you have a scheme to loan money at two jer cent. I desire to place a large ot of goods with you as security ni will borrow a lew tnousana in order to buv my spring stock. You will be protected as these goods were boughtjow. "But." asks the government, sel fish and one-aided which Polk would give, "are yon a farmer ?" jno." savs tne mercnani, -oui i am a citizen of this country I am a nart of vonr concern we are all - r s ; .. the government. "But." savs Uncle Sam, this law does not reach any other class. It is a class legislation law the farm ers wrought up by a crowd oi aem rnrnf nassed it. ana you are not in it. You crnnot get the money. The farmers want it their way all other classes are choked out. "The farmer proposes to raise what he pleases you must pay your taxes in order ho loan him money t twn' nnr cent, but VOU will be obliged to go to individuals and pay ten and twelve. "I am sorry but you are foolish. Yah ahonld all become farmers." "But if we were all farmers," asks the merchant and the lawyer end the printer and the carpenter who nave since come iu w uvm w oiL- if ota were all farmers to vhsim wnnld the farmer sen nis Ty a w im And Uncle Sam, with a twinkle in his eye, said to Jerry SimpBon and Colonel Polk. "But could they buy it ? "Certainly, because they propose to buy printing presses ana.-pnun wild cat dat money arm pav hvtv Avorvthinc with nothing. A.l thA mfirchant went oft to a river and reduced himself to a cold damp body. Usrlfl wins. nr ;i.;x fn mv t.n onr citizens, Tie ucoii yj w ---- . . i .l m or a han been selling t -KTr Tliftf nverv for UOU- sumptioD, Dr. King's New Life Pills, Bocklen's Arnica Salve and Electric Bitters and have never A',a ttiafc BAH fift Well. nauuiou loujcuit. ---- . mnn BTinh universal Mtisfaction. We do not hesitate to . . t - & ! am W OTA . .Atvi QTOrw 1 1 III PI- H11U no Stand ready to refund the purchase follow their use. These remedies have won their great PPnlarIty Purely on their meiits. W. W. Scott & Co., Druggists. ' LENOIR, ST. C, Ptffsr Pflffsbis BsBble. Mail and Expresi. Hon. William A PflflPoi. TTr.u States Senator from Kansas, is ad- yocat.ng the wholesale robbery' of Hrge classes of our fellow citizens for the benefit of one other o.laaa whom he chooses to call "farmers," and whom he chooses to say he rep resents. - . Next he proposes to make a print- ing machine the author of money in: this country. Then he 'swears by his own long beard, and by the a- pothesis of financial chimeras, that this printed money shall be taken by everybody around the whole world a the true representative of values and in exchange for all values i at the price which the nrintinar ma chine stamps on the piece of paper. ..wA Ui i i i ... . ,r t ,1 uu iu ait peopie snail taKe an the equal pieces of paper of one size, not at equal value as money. out one piese at $), another of the same size and weight at $10. another at $100, another at $1,000, another at $10,000, another at $100,000, an other at $1,000,000, and so on in definitely, merely because the pnnt- jng macnine says so. Bluebeard Peffer reinforces this oracular declaration of his with ri sing to his full height upon his toes, before the audiences who are green enough to listen to him, and then plumping his body down upon his heels with a velocity, weight and detonation which produce a small earthquake and striko fear and trembling mto the gaping crowd. This Bluebeard's theories are so ridiculous that they must explode as did Law's South Sea bubble and Hudson, the railway king's manipu lation of securities. But as neither of those celebrated historic balloon, gasbags exploded without injuring many deluded and weak mortals, so we may expect injury to be atten dant upon Bluebeard's decapitation of fair virtues respectfully-named Public Credit, the Faith of the United States, Commercial Honesty, Sound Values, Hopeful Industry. Necessary Agriculture and Hum ming Manufactures. With Blue beard Peffer the motive power and the secret of danger lie in his activ ity and perserverance, just as with his prototype, Henry VIII., they lay in carnal pleasure and the edgo of his sword. Let the people of the Southeast ern States, where Bluebeard Peffer is now holding forth, turn their eyes and see the full operation of his schemes carried on in another nation and the ruin, destruction and par alyzation of government and all the reai interests of the people which they have produced. The exhibi tion is afforded by the South Ameri can Republic of Argentine. Her lato president, Celman, possesoed all the autocratic powers with which Blue beard Peffer would like to be cloth ed, and for a series of years he wenc on decreeing that things should be as he wished. At one time he had the nation almost unanimously at his back, so that they adopted his name, and not to be a "uelmanist was to be no body. But Celman, with autocrat ic powers and a united nation at his back, could not long put off the bursting of his bubble. The col lapse came last year, and the ruin of the great house of Baring Bi oth ers & Co. is only one fragment of tho debrrs of the financial chaos into which Celman hurled his blinded countrymen, notwithstanding ho had the support of the greatest ban king house in the world, and that behind them stood the Bank of England and many other bank ers. Bad as things have been in At- fentine, they are still worse now. Iyer j body wants to sell everything, and nobody will buy anything. The printing-machine money, instead of being and remaining at par, as Blue beard Peffer assures his dupes must be the case, has almost gone out of sight. The dispatches received in this city from Buenoa Aires to day quote gold at 300, whicjpls inten tionally a misleading quotation, be cause the fact is that gold-is at 400, and the excuse that the Argenti nians make for this attempted de ception is that they mean gold is at 300 premium above the 100 of par; and this is a deception (calling gold 300 when in reality it is 400) which deceives nobody but tho blinded Argentinians themselves, showing that they have not yet sufficiently emerged from the thick clouds of. darkness brought aionnd their affairs by the Celman money printing ma chine to see things clearly and as they actually are. y - Now Try Ibis. It will cost you nothing and will surely do you good, if you have a Cough, Cold, or any trouble with Throat Chest, or Lung. Drying's New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds is guaranteed to give relief, ai money will be paid baok. - Sufferers from La Grippe found it jast the thing and under its use had speedy and perfect recov ery. Try a sample bottle'at our ex nnfi and learn for vonrsel&fust how irood a thing it is. Trail bottles free at VV, W. Scott & CoV Drug Store. Large size 50 cents and , f l. WEDNESDAY, AUG. Not a Subject fur Jesting. N. Y. Journal of Commerce . There"are great realities concern ing which the wisest of men can know but little. Life is a mystery, and no definition of it yet given will satisfy any thoughtful mind. - We see it in plants, and we watch its development with curious eyes, but of what it consists we cannot tell. What is it that covers one tree with beautiful foliage, and decks another with blossomspf exquisite hue, and hangs upon a third the fruit ripen ing in the summer's sun, while nearby is a broad trnnk with spread ing branches, leafless and fruitless, holding its desolate fingers bare and dry and mute appeal to the brood ing heavens? We say that one is alive, and the other is dead, but what life is and what is tho mystery of death we do not know. And it is not always easy to dis tinguish between the two, even with our keenest observation. The cat erpillar creeps to an angle in the old bridge, and spinning a winding sheet about itself, passes out of ex istence as far as we can see. Winter comes on and the little gray nest is. frozen solid in the dripping water that runs over its silken surface, or lies bleak and bare for months fa cing the cold north winds tha; are merciless in their destructive rage. Examine the cocoon and nothing seems more like the charnel house in which there can be but death and sure decay. If a vital germ had once beet wrapped in this frail shroud could it survive a tempera ture that freezes the fluids in the solid rock? The spriDg has come and the folds are laid aside, and the beautiful moth, with hues of crim son, or scarlet and gold, winged for its summer diy, is b?rn of the shape less mass that appeared so helpless and hopeless in its icy pall. There was all the while a life in the nest which no wintry blast could steal away. If we look upon our fellows the mystery deepens, and we are no nearer the solution of the problem. One is in vigorous health, the blood mantles the cheek, the eye is aglow with lustre, the lips charm us with eloquonce of speech or magic har monies of song, and every motion is full of conscious power. A few days later, and the lips are sealed, the brightuess has gone out of tho eye, and the cheeks are pale and cold. We say that death has come, and we lay the form, swift to decay as soon as the heart is still, away in the hiding tomb. But what is doatb, and how does it differ from life, and what is it that produces the wondrous change? Words upon this theme are easy enough to the flaent tongue, but that vital princi ple that kindles the cheeks at its presence, or leaves it wan at its departure, has never yet been caught and questioned and made to revenl its marvelous secret. And when the change has come, and the body so cold and lifeless has been buried from our sight, is that tho finol scene? Is there anything hidden in the inclosing -shroud that shall come forth and put on wings some bright spring day after the long bleak frosts have come and gone? Or has what we called the "life escaped from its clay tene-. ment to dwell in some new abode,or to put on some new form, or to live apafrt from the flesh to which it once gave grace of motion? As we go on in our quest we are baffled at every step by some new and1 still unsolved problem. Mystery crowds upon mystery, and to bur deepest yearnings nature sends back no an s wen ng message We give our cho sen names to the existences and changes that puzzles us, but that does not help us to understand them. Of some things man is self con scious." When we open onr lips and speak of ourselves we affirm the ex istence of life. The man who says "I am agnostic" confutes himself by every assertion. He knows that when he says "I," for there caa be no "I" except in consciousness of personal existence. And that knowledge in all its relations and possibilities is as far removed- from agnosticism as the glowing sunlight is from the blackest midnight darkness. But without this the ex: pre88ion refutes its own statement. When a man declares that he knows nothing he thereby assumes that this is the one thing "he knows. And there must have been a vast process of reasoning and research before one can come to any such definite con clusion. This consciousness of per sonal existence, with the power of thought and reason, is the sensation of life. VVill this light ever be ex tinguished? Can it be destroyed? Has it not in iUelf all the elements of immtrtality. . ; And when this life ceases to reside in the body where it was first- con scious of a home, what becomes of it? Annihilation does not seem pos sible to it. Its own sense of what it is, and of its pwn capabilities, is ut terly opposed to even the apprehen sion of its -mortality. Man. feels around him the bonds of his frail and decaying prison house, but they f urnish no fetters for-his ; thought. :. When the flebh falls away the life that dwelt therein is still soaring on tireless wings that feel no limit: to their flight and wear no sign of a coming dissolution. On that shore 18, 1891. where the life must lay down the garments of flesh the spirit looks out with eager eye upon the vast ocean that stretches beyond, and over which it is called to go, and finds no answer to the questions that come crowding upon the' anxious thoughts. How far is it to the oth. er side? What is it like over there ? Do the engagements and ' experien ces of the present state make any difference with the welcome it will receive when it has crossed the divi ding sea? - We hate simply clustered these considerations together with a view nf presenting them as a barrier . to that levity of expression now so com mon in and out of the press, in re ferring to the future state and the manifold mysteries of life and death. We have indicated certain realities from which the most thoughtless cannot escape. These aie not prov ocative of mirth. When one said it was a serious thing to die, a hearer remarked it was a still more serious thing to live;but both are too serious to be made the subject of flippant merriment-Several paragraphs, as we write, are going the rounds of the leading papers, making a jest of the change that must come to all and of the possibility of a regathering to a new life of the dissolving dust from its resting place in the tomb. There is neither sense nor decency in this growing habit of treating with un meaning levity the themes so wor thy of man's highest thought, and we utter, this as our. earnest protest against it. Wss Uacnni Whitewashed. N. Y. Son. Canton, Miss'The following letter written by President J. H. McDowell of the Tennessee State Alliance, and who was chairmon of the committee that tried Macune at Ocala, Fla., last December, was given State Lecturer McAllister for publication by a prominent member of the Texas Alliance to whom it was written at the recent Fort Wortlj Anti-Sub-Treasury Conven tion of Alliance men. Nashville, Tenn. Dec. 17. Thomas J. Middleton : Dear Sir and Brother : In reply to your favor of Dec. 10. will en deavor without, prejudice to give you the truth. I was Chairman of the investigating committee, The prosf undisputed, showing that Macune and Sledgo hsd paid $7,000 cash for the controlling interest in the Southern A liance Farmer, offi cial organ of the Georgia Alliance that Sledge another owner of the Economist, had a controlling inter est in the Mercury, the Texas Alli ance organ: that their Georgia pa per sent out as a supplement Pat, Calhoun a letter on the Sub Treas ury bill before the Legislature met, with the view of strengthening him for United States Senator ; that Macune had this letter submitted to him for revision before it was published; then he (Macune) went to Atlanta and remained there dur ing the contest for United States Senator and aided Calhoun, know ing him to be attorney for the big gest railroad combine in the South; that he (Macune) went to Calhoun's private rcs'dence at night and re mained until after midnight : that he got after the Senatorial fight ov er $2,000 in cashfrom Pat Calhoun, which he claimed was a loan and gave as security orders on the Na tional Treasurer for $2,000 due him. In the committees of investigation Evans, Jones and other strong friends of Macune tried to prevent tbe facts from being reported to the convention. Majority and minor ity reports were drawn up and sign ed, but after much wrangling in the committee, to .prevent too much friction in the convention by Macune's friends, which some fear ed would disrupt the order, a num ber of us submitted to the majority report, that was clearly a white wash." I, Hall and otheas explained the matter in the convention. J. H. MoDowell. State Alliance Lecturer McAlis ter has called a convention of Alli ance men to meet here on Aug. 19, at which time national delegates will be selected. The call issued by Mc Alis ter is to tbe following . All op posed to the Sub-Treasury and land loan schemes; all who are opposed to turning the Alliance over to de signing shams and leprous dema gogues who desire to turn the order into a secret political machine for ther own benefit; all who are oppo sed to Macuneism in the Alliance with its corruption, bribery, per jury, and fraud; all who favor re storing the Alliance to its original purposes and making it a non polit ical, non-partizan organization free from the cantaminating influence of intriguing frauds and mercenary lmposters.'-' Bncklsa's Anlei Stirs. The best Salve in the world for cuts, bruises, : sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever sores, letter, chapped hands, chilblains, corns and. all skin emotions, and positively cures Piles, or no pay required , It' ia' guaran teeu to give aausiauuou, w-moucj refunded. Price zo cents per dox. For sale by.W. W. ccott uo. IT WILL KOT GO DOWN. Sob-Tretssry DsnoBncsd Is Kansis. fl opeea, Kan , Angusi 4. A gen sation has been caused in Alliance circles here by the publication of open letters from W. A. Harris and C,W. Shun, prominent leaders in the people's party protesting a gainst the sub-treasury scheme. ; Harris is regarded aa - the , safest leader in the Alliance, and would have been elected United States sen" ator in place of Pieffer, had he not been an ex-confederate '! colonel. Shun was a condidate for lieu tenant governor last fall. The sub-alliances . throughout Kansas will this month vote on the snb-treasnry scheme, to decide whether it shall be incorporated in the people's party platform. The indications now are that it will; be defeated. Frank McGrath, presi dent of the alliance, who had been warm in its advocacy, has now 'come out openly against the sub-treasury scheme, and a big fight is looked for when the anonal meeting of the alliance occurs in September. Colonel Harris deslares thaf'after a brilliant victory had been won by the Alliance the socalled sub-treasury scheme was brought forth, a scheme, in its essential features, modeled after all the most vicious and corrupt practices which we had condemned. It is patterned after the illegitimate loaning of money by the government to the national banks and to the railroads and the warehousing and storing of goods for importers and distillers;a scheme to tax many for the benefit of a few and of even the most donbtf ul bene fit to these few." Harris adds that the substantial business men all over the conutry have unanimously protested against it and it ie certain to bring about a complete overthrow of the people's party if it is not abandoned by the alliance. Delusive Liberality. Ashe v ill e Citizen. At the last session of the General Assembly of North Carolina it won some cheap honor by contributing to the Chicago World's Exhibit $25,000 to be paid out of the fund arising from the repayment of the Direct Tax back to those from whom it has been exacted, It was a sham generosity, a sham exhibit of interest, a fraudulent display of State pride, not warranted under the circumstances It was a mean attempt to do and not to at the same time; to appear to give, and not to give inthesame breath; to appropriate public moneys to a mag nificent public demonstration; and appropriate that over which it had no right of control. To the direct tax fund the Legislature had no claim whatever. It was private property, restored after long con tention with the general govern ment to those from whom, as it was claimed, it had been wronglfully exacted. Our . State Government was placed simply in a fiduciary, ca pacity, and made the agent through which reinbursements should be made. It was certain, in . advance that there were enough claimants, and more than enough, in connec tion with unavoidable contingent ex penses, to absord the whole of the restored fund. But the Legislature did not have the courage to meet the issue squ re ly and honestly. It Knew the drift of public sentiment; it knew the importance of the Woild's Fair, the freat opportunity presented to forth Carolina to be made known to all the nations of the earth, and how detrimiental to her welfare her absence through official neglect would prove. Therefore, with in sincere, time-servirg policy, it acted upon the apparent impulse of gen uine State pride, but with the real effect of "speaking tne . word of promise to the ear and breaking it to the hope." When the time came to utilize imaginary resources, that Legislature would have been out of its existence, and the members could very easily disclaim responsibility for the shame and disappointment. The palming off the direct tax fund, which, to the eud falsely pro posed, is non est '8 like Mark Twain's transfer of the duty of risk ing his life in the battles of freedom to his cousins and his uncles. It is evasion of the - meanest kind. If North Carolina appears at the Chi cago exhibit some others must pay for it; somebody also must sustain the' honor of. the State. No doubt, as in the past, patriotic men and liberal corporations will Je found to do so. - Gov. Holt is-right in his deter mination to preserve the direct tax fund distinctly for legitimate uses. It is a pity,1 however that the false liberality of the Legislature, now so transparrent, has not sooner been exposed. ' - Miss Bacon Do you think it is worse for a woman to smdke ciga rettes than a man? - Miss McBean I never knew of a woman who smoked a man, NUMBER. 48. Tfi DEAL. 1L. DEAL De al & Lenoir, IT. G. New Goods Coming everyday. Hats, Shoes Dress in Goods and Notions. Meat, Flour, Lard, for tlie least money in this town, see our prices ! they will convince you. We want chickens and eggs for ; cash. IiOOlr. for our now Ad vertisement next week Thanking our patrons for past favos, trusting a continuance of , - your patronage bv giving you bar gains. We are your friends, Deal & Deal. LINVILLE A place planned and developing as a Great Resort. Situated in the ( Mountains of A region noted for healthfuluess and jbeauty of f An elevation of 3,800 feet with cool Invigorating Climate. f - i It is being laid out with taste and skill, with well graded nads and ex tensive Forest Parks. desirable plac for fine residen ces and HEALTHFUL HOMES A good oportunity for profitable investments.' For illustrated pam phlet, addrea LINYILLE IHPROYEHFNT CO LinvUle Mitchell Co N. 0, Deal f i, . : : i f' ': 'ij i ! j , t'-r I f V il r I T . Z ' It ' -1 IK m lis V: "Is 11- .1 ! ; 11 I'i hi n : 1 I !: Li : j! i